Remarks by George L. Mehaffy

34th Annual Conference on the First-Year Experience

Dallas, Texas. February 9, 2014

Re-Imagining the First Year of College

Two facts I recently heard are haunting me. Several weeks ago, the Southern Education Foundation announced that for the first time in the history of the United States, a majority of the students attending public schools in our country qualify for free or reduced priced lunches. And about the same time, I read that a respected demographer, William Frey, has predicted that the percentage of young Americans with college degrees will start to decline in 2020, and not reach the rate of 2015 until 2050. Those two sobering statistics, of course, reflect much larger demographic consequences for higher education: increasing numbers of low income students, increasing numbers of students of color, increasing numbers of first generation students. And those students have historically not been well served by our school systems. For this country to remain a vibrant economy and a robust democracy, many more of those students must not only have access to higher education; they have to successfully complete a college degree. Yet we still offer a college experience, particularly in the first year, that looks like something out of the 1960s or 70s, ignoring demographic realities, exorbitantly high failure rates, and rising national concern.

The first year of college is broken. Students in the first year fail in large numbers, and given the changing student body, will continue to do at the same or higher rates. Those that survive are in danger of dying of terminal boredom. Beset by a host of structural challenges and outmoded legacy practices, the first year of college has to be re-engineered. I believe that the time has come to start over again. No amount of tinkering at the edges will suffice to remake the first year an effective and engaging introduction to American higher education. No fabulous first year experience course can make up for the dismal aspects of other experiences in the first year of college. The stakes are high, and getting higher. The lives of our students, the future of our country, and the fate of our institutions are bound up in the nature and quality of the first year. It’s time for action…on a grand scale.

Many if not most of you are involved in designing and delivering first year experience courses. Those courses vary enormously in length, in scope, and in design. But what they have in common is an effort to ameliorate the problems of the first year of college. Far too often, first year experience courses shoulder the burden of being an antidote to some of the maladies and bad practices of the first year, and indeed the core problems of American higher education.

I celebrate with you the focus you have on the first year experience courses, your hard work, your devotion, and your creativity. But today, I want to move beyond that work, important as it is, and ask you to take on a larger challenge. I want you to join in a movement to redesign the entire first year of college. So I challenge each of you to think about revolution, not evolution.

So What’s Wrong?

I recently received an email from one of the AASCU provosts. Here’s what he said:

“We want to reinvigorate the residential experience for our students. We believe it is eroding and has been for the past several years. We seem to be losing the essence of a residential learning community.Contributing to that loss are the following: students going home on weekends; lack of student attendance at activities and events; students spending huge amounts of time on social media, etc.

That email, and the observations that it contains, point to a very troubling phenomenon. Now it may be that report is an outlier, just a unique circumstance of that particular school. But I doubt it. I suspect that symbolically it’s more likely the canary in the coal mine. It’s a message from our students. It’s a message that there are lots of things that are more interesting, more compelling, and more engaging than the structures and experiences we have constructed on our campuses.

For those of us concerned about the first year of college, there are both a set of generic issues plaguing higher education and by extension the first year of college, and a distinct set of first year-specific issues, that create less than optimal conditions for the most powerful first year of college. Let me list a few of the challenges we face:

The first problem is the elephant in the room. One of higher education’s critical tasks is to teach, yet virtually no one is taught to teach. What’s remarkable is that this issue goes so unremarked. No other profession in the world prepares its workforce by deliberately ignoring the preparation of its workers for at least half of their job. It is truly an amazing thing to consider.

The reciprocal of that, of course, is the second problem. Faculty, trained in their discipline, and trained as researchers, honor research over teaching. So don’t be surprised that the recent study at Northwestern University found that full time adjuncts produced greater learning outcomes than tenure track and tenured faculty. That’s what I call a “duh” study. People who are assigned and paid to teach will usually do a better job than faculty who have obligations for both teaching and scholarship, particularly when we know which counts more for tenure, promotion, and prestige. The tension between teaching and research, and the genuflection at the altar of research, impoverishes teaching and short-changes students.

A third problem is more subtle but equally pernicious. We prize above all the autonomy of individual faculty members. That’s why we believe in the cottage industry model of course design. Everyone gets to design his or her course individually. That may make sense in some cases. But tell me if this makes sense. If every institution teaches Psy 101, and each institution has 4 sectionsof PSY 101 this coming fall, it means that we will collectively be teaching 16,000 sections of Psy 101 as if it has never been taught before. Does that make sense? Is that a good use of precious faculty time? I believe that’s an enormous waste of time and energy by faculty all over the country, time that could be devoted to working with individuals and small groups of students, conducting research on learning outcomes, and much more. And that enormous commitment of time and energy does not usually result in a more powerful course; it only produces at best a few truly stellar courses, a wide swath of average courses, and probably an embarrassingly large number of mediocre or downright bad courses. In other words, we are willing to tolerate wide disparities in outcomes for students to preserve and protect faculty autonomy.

A fourth problem is design. The paradigm for our institutions is fundamentally flawed. Barr and Tagg, in a classic article in Change Magazine in 1995, argued that our institutions have been created as teaching institutions, instead of learning institutions. That paradigm conflates means and ends. We teach, and therefore our work is done. How would things change if we focused on learning, a student-centered approach, instead of teaching, a faculty-centric approach?

A fifth problem is that our prevailing model of learning is flawed. We started by splitting academic affairs apart from student affairs, and as a result bifurcated the learning for our students into the two realms of substantially cognitive and affective, when they are in real life inseparable. Then we use the course as the core building block of learning, creating a set of discrete, often disconnected experiences that do not connect to other courses, other experiences during the semester, or to courses and experiences in other semesters. We leave it to students to make connections between courses, between discrete and atomized educational experiences, to make for themselves a comprehensive understanding of the educational experience they are undertaking.

But the greatest flaw in the learning model we have created is that the faculty member is far too often at the center. The faculty member is the expert, the center of the experience, the deliverer of the content. The course is faculty-centric. Despite the ancient advice to be a guide on the side, not the sage on the stage, most of us cannot resist the bright lights.

And there’s a companion problem. At the center of our institutions lies a core belief. We believe that our most fundamental responsibility is to teach. I would argue that has pernicious consequences. We assume that every learning experience grows out of a teaching experience. A second core belief is about where and when learning takes place. As a recovering academic, I have been startled to discover recently that students learn outside of class. Who knew? As a faculty member and teacher, I had always assumed that learning took place only in class. In fact, if I’m honest, I thought learning took place only in my class. And if I’m really honest, I thought that learning took place in my class only when I was speaking.

The truth, of course, is that students learn all the time, and in all sorts of places, within and beyond classrooms, within and beyond institutions. We are hard wired for learning. My seven year old grandson, Jacob, is amazing to watch. I teach him every time we hang out together. I taught him how hotel plastic keys work. I taught him how to tie his shoes. But he learns when I’m not teaching him, too. In fact, he learns more from me when I’m not consciously teaching him than he learns when I am. He’s watching and listening, and always learning from the way I interact with the world. Jacob is a little learning machine, and only a fraction of his learning comes from my teaching. All of our students are learning machines. Yet far too often, we repress rather than invigorate that instinct to learn. We bore rather than excite. And far too often, we do it not because we’re stupid or mean-spirited but because it’s just easier to keep doing what we’ve always done than imagine a different kind of experience.

In its most extreme form, the faculty-centric focus expresses itself in the assumption that no learning experience can occur without a teacher. Therefore, we have built a complex organization around courses, always led by teachers, which produce credits, which when aggregated represent a curriculum, which culminates in a degree. And at its core, this belief system assumes that our job is to teach. That assumption makes teachers and teaching the center of the organization. We become focused on teachers, and our institutions become faculty-centric. But in fact our job is not to teach. Our job is to create the environment which optimizes learning for our students.

But let me tell you why that’s a problem that will grow ever larger in this age of information. I recently traveled from San Diego to Chicago in a sleeping compartment on a train with that magic 7 year old grandson, Jacob.…47 hours of close encounters. Despite what you might imagine, it was a blast. As a protection against boredom, Jacob carried with him a rainbow loom, a series of pegs on a stick, which is used to weave rubber bands into rings, bracelets and the like. Not far out of San Diego, the rainbow loom came out. Boredom had already set in. Jacob started weaving, but then became confused. So he pulled out his ipad-mini, pulled up one of the 1,000 You Tube videos done by children about how to weave on the rainbow loom, played the video, backed it up and watched it again, and then went on with his weaving. That was fascinating to watch. When we got to Kansas, we started talking about tornados, death and destruction, the really good stuff for 7 year old little boys. I told him about storm shelters and what they looked like, and we tried to find one. But night fell, and we never found a storm shelter. Yet when we got to Chicago, Jacob built a storm shelter on MineCraft, despite the fact that he had never seen one. Recently, I spent time with Jacob over Christmas. We were building a Lego Star Wars B-Wing fighter. He talked about some things he had learned about Legos from his friend Evan. I said: “How old is Evan?” “7,” he said (just like Jacob). “Does he live in your neighborhood, or go to school with you, I asked? No, he said, I don’t know where he lives. Puzzled, I asked: “Well, then where do you see him?” Jacob looked at me patiently, and explained that Evan was on You Tube. In fact, Evan, the 7 year old, has a channel on YouTube about toys. He has almost a million subscribers, and his videos have been seen more than 800 million times. Jacob thinks of him as just another friend in his life.

Jacob, and other children his age, will be in our institutions in 11 years. They will expect to control their learning. They will expect to control the pace of their learning. And they won’t be excited about a 50 minute lecture. It will be dead on arrival. What we need to do as faculty members, in this age of incredible information and analytic power at the fingertips of our students, is quit thinking that we have to deliver instruction, especially content. We don’t have to teach the course. Instead, we have to create environments in which students learn, sometimes alone, sometimes with other students in the classroom, sometimes with others around the world, and yes, sometimes even with us…but with us truly as guides, not lecturers.

So that’s the general context, the environment in which we think about the first year of college. But there are also several first year-specific problems as well. Here are two:

We spend the least amount of money on the first two years of college, and then seem to be startled that those are the years of the greatest loss of our students. A study of four university systems found that if the average weighted cost of instruction for the first two years was one, upper division costs were one and a half times as much, master’s level three times as much, and doctoral education four times as expensive. We spend the least amount of money in the first two years, and we lose the greatest number of students. What’s wrong with that picture?

The second problem with the first year is the curriculum. It’s largely irrelevant to the lives of students. Crafted by faculty members to reflect faculty and discipline-specific interests, the typical first year curriculum is a series of introductory classes in potential majors, often resembling the Platte River, a mile wide, an inch deep, and about as interesting. Laced through the first year curriculum are also the courses to fulfill general education requirements. The design of the general education portion of the curriculum is often the focus of protracted philosophical arguments and battles among faculty members, with a substantial amount of departmental self-interest thrown in, yet for students, most of the time general education is two from column A, and three from column B. I call the first year curriculum the broccoli curriculum. It looks nice, and may be good for you, but nobody wants to eat it. Students take things that look strange, disconnected from their lives and experiences, but are told that it will be good for them later on. I return once again to my star pupil, Jacob. When I spent time with him recently, one night I cooked broccoli. He allowed as how he didn’t think he wanted any. I tried all of the usual arguments, and heard myself say: “But it’s good for you.” He was not persuaded. Finally, I pulled out what I thought was my trump card. “Look,” I said, “I like broccoli. I’ll eat it myself.” He looked at me with a look that said: Knock yourself out! But the fact that I liked broccoli was unpersuasive. It didn’t matter that I liked broccoli. He didn’t. And when we plaintively say to students, “But we like it,” about our disciplines, I think that they, like Jacob, far too often remain unconvinced. The fact that we like it doesn’t necessarily mean our students will like it.

Creating a New First Year of College

So how do we go about creating a new design for the first year of college? As our students become more diverse, and as tuition becomes the most important single source of revenue, and as states implement more and more performance funding, pressure to revise the first year will grow. So advocates for a revised first year of college have some built-in support for their interest in revision. But what would a completely redesigned first year look like? I think a redesigned first year will have four critical elements: Institutional intentionality, faculty, curriculum and students.

First, we need to be much more purposeful and intentional about how we construct the first year. We need the entire institution to become focused, to harness the collective energy and boundless capacity of the university to work together for a common goal. We call that institutional intentionality.If you look at the work that John Gardner has done over the past decade, first in the FYE program and more recently in the Gateways to Completion work, I think he would say that most of that work, at its heart, is about institutional intentionality, about focus, about commitment to the firstyear.